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Thursday 21 June 2018

Lanning, Haynes, Villani undertake Level 3 coaching course

Lanning, Haynes, Villani undertake Level 3 coaching course
Australia chief Meg Lanning, has joined national colleagues Rachael Haynes and Elyse Villani, in embraced a High Performance Level 3 instructing course at Brisbane's National Cricket Center in the desire for understanding the amusement better.

"We considered it to be a decent opportunity to build up our comprehension of the amusement and understand it from with a better point of view," Lanning told cricket.com.au on Thursday (June 21). "It will be a decent expectation to absorb information for me, only for me to consider the amusement in an unexpected way, how to get the best out of players and nature you're in and take in a couple of new things.

"It's something I've addressed (head mentor) Matthew Mott about a reasonable piece, and he's been exceptionally reassuring," Lanning said. "It gives you an alternate point of view on things and influences you to consider things in an unexpected way. It's likewise an opportunity to expand yourself.

"I don't know (about instructing post retirement) to be completely forthright, yet part of doing the course is figuring out whether I do truly appreciate it or not, and gives me a construct to continue enhancing in light of while I'm playing."

In the event that Lanning, who hasn't considered training as a genuine choice post her playing days, decides to head down the way, she will join a distinguished rundown of female mentors, spearheaded by Alex Blackwell, who was named Lancashire Thunder's guide in England's T20 Super League in the wake of having resigned in February. Leah Poulton, the previous Australian hitter, heads Cricket Australia's first class female program, incredible Shelley Nitschke has been designated associate to the national ladies' group, under head mentor, Matthew Mott.

Furthermore, both the NSW sides, Lendlease NSW Breakers and Sydney Thunder's WBBL side, are under Joanne Broadbent, Lisa Keightley supervises Western Fury and Perth Scorchers and Andrea McCauley has South Australia and Adelaide Strikers under her wing - something which Lanning sees as a positive move.

"It's a space that is developed throughout the last three or four years," she said. "We have Shelley Nitschke as a major aspect of our Australian set up and Leah Poulton is heading up the NPS program also. I think there are forms set up now, so in the event that you would like to get required as a present player (who is thinking about) training down the track, you can begin that excursion while you're playing.

"There's certainly some better than average learning being shared from past players right now, and the present players too, regarding instructing the people to come. So ideally we can utilize that (learning) as much as we can," she included.

Starting September, Australia ladies will head into one of their busiest seasons yet, taking an interest in two Women's World T20s, an away Ashes, and two-sided arrangement's against New Zealand, Pakistan, West Indies and Sri Lanka.

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